OCR Text |
Show '&PJgf$2i: SUNDAY HERALD Rites Slated For Aged Provoan Called by .'Death ' Armed Forces Display Might On Their Day in Utah Cities Am. Fork Man PLEAS ANTGROVE Funeal service for Ernest W. Olsen, 51, who died Thursday at 2 a. m. in an American Fork hospital of a heart' ailment, will be conducted (U.R) SALT LAKE CITY. May 19 tional fighters flew formation me rieas-aiwonaay ai z p. m. inLDS Paced, by snappily - uniformed over the business area. . ward drove First bands, parades here and in other chapel by Harold Bullock,' bishop Utah; cities, and towns Saturday , Chief excitement in; Provo on pf the; Grove ward, ; paid tribute to. the. nation's fight- - Armed Forces day was, the severFriends may call at the Olr in in observance of Armed al flights of jet planes, which Sunday evening and at mortuary Forces day, j Provoans' perhaps saw because C. residence- in Pleasant Mortensen the family to to Provo them took make was "it An' hour-lon- g 10 a. m. Monday until 16. at .precession Jan. 1888, from Grove a wide turn starting at Salt tne sena-o- ii tor observances in good as r F services. of time j ederiksharn. the Utahv capital city. On the re- Lake," "one spectator put it. Denr Burial will be in the PleasaWt Hjorring, viewing stand were Maj. Gen. Flags at the corners of business mark. He died Grove: cemetery. X At William R. Schmidt, director of blocks and on a, few houses was June 16, 1904. He was born Aug. 6. 1889. in the Continental United States the chief observance locally. She was a Pleasant Grove, a son of Charles planning group, and city; .county convert to the J. and Mary Okerman Olsen. He and state dignitaries. LDS church had resided in Pleasant Groveall ' While" the procession was un- and came to his life. Utah in 1905, He married Litha Winters Nov. der way," jet planes and conven- in 11, 1914. in the Salt Lake LDS in Bed temDle. He was active in the LDS where she lived church and at the time of his AMERICAN FORK C. John Mrs. Mortensen for a year and death Jwas a high) priest. Adamson, 80, ' retired cattleman then moved to Eureka "After He was a farmer, also, servir g and farmer was discovered dead living there for .18 years she as custodian of the Pleasant Grove in his bed Thursday evening. Mr. moved to Astoria, Ore', for three high school for the 25. years, h'.t Adamson lived alone in an apart- years and then Orem. She retired in 1942. ment. He was unusually hale and has lived in Prvo since. Survivingare his widow. Plea: T (U.R) 19 KANAB. Utah, May for his Advanced years GrovertKree of his four sons, Is survived by one She hearty Robert Roberts 35, manager of and Wednesday "nad made a trip Mrs. Marie (Lee of Provo and Gordon OJsen.' Provo. and Verlj n the Ranch Lodge motel here for to Salt LiCeClty. Death was at- one grandson. Edward M. Lee of L. and. Don Morrel Olsen, both of t te past month, Saturday was tributed to natural causes by the Orem and a granddaughter. Ella Pleasant Grove; two grand charged with embezzlement of doctor summoned. Marie Lee of Qrem. children; his mother, Pleasant 9425 and held in the Kane county set 1,1 are and services three brothers three Funeral Monday Mr. Adamson Oct. Grove; jail pending arraignment. sisters: Albert Olsen, Salt bake 1870. in- Pleasant Grove. His at 1:30 p. m. in. the Fifth-EighSheriff Maysod Weeks said father, a pioneer miller. was ward chapel with Bishop D; City; Ruben Olsen.v Los Angelen; berts was taken into custody Fri- operating Cameron off lei atlng Herman Olsen. Pamona, Cal.; Mrs a mill in pleasant Eccles o ,, day at Nephi as' he. waited for' a n Friends mav can ai me vaneyLMien waaiev. Pleasant urove: Th southbound bus; after, he was moved back to American Fork! mortuary .Sunday from 6 Annie Thorrig Magna. and Mrs.-Ltrailed by officers" on reports he within several months and Mr.! P Vina Smith, Provo. J1U l a"a had taken his personal effects and Adamson has resided here since. E., Monday prior to services. abandoned the lodge. He was the son' of Jamfs and Burial will be In the Provo City--I The hornbill, a bird of Malaya. sheds not only its feathers once a Martha Cowell Adamson, and was cemetery year, but also the lining of its g a member of tike- LDS crop. In , church. He married Agnes C Adamson no relation) here on Jan. 10, 1900. They were the patents of in ' LEHI Paul Hansen, 15r of ffye ehjldren. .three of whom in ' Mrs. father American Fork, received emer- have preceded' their Phyllis Leona Taylor " gency treatment at the Lehi hos- death. Perez. 54. native of Provo and are his two Surviving widow, of Huntington Park, pital Friday after being hit on Mrs. .Bramwell (Mel-v- resident the head by a jhotput during the daughters,. at the home of Jier died Cal., de St.. Jeor, Perron air base, Mrs. ;tE. J. (Patricia) Alpine day track and field meet daughter, Texas; and Mrs." Arnold O (Phyl Perez, at Downey,. Cal., Friday, t here. Dr. Elmo' Eddington treated lis) Larson, Salt Lake City: four following a, lingering illness grandchildren and one sister, She was born in Provo, Jan. young Hansen for a bad lacera Mrs. Mary Crompton, American 8, 1897 the daughter of George 1 1 S 11 tion on the head. The youth later Fork. was released to his home. The and Elizabeth Thomas Taylor. She Funeral' was educated in the Provo schools physician said there was.no frac pending the arrangements arrival of thei dwagh- - and moved to California in 1917. ture. ter from Texas. She was a member " of the LDS '.' church. besides her daughSurviving 9 Jesse R; Waight ter, is one son. E. Michael Nolon. J. S. army; one grandchild; two Funeral services for Jtsse R. sisters. Mrs. W.JH. (Edith) Mal- (Continued from Page One) old son of ben, Alhambra,: Cal., Mrs. Mae waight. seven-montto have been one of two "occu- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Waight of Dixon, Provo; two brothers. Basil pants of an automobile which Orem. will be conducted Wednes D: Taylor, Provol; Jack D. Taylor, " ' i plunged into the flooded river a day at 2 p.m. in the Faitbanks- - Los Angeles. few hours after a bridge collapsed Pyne mortuary under direction cf Services will ibe' held Monday Rex Blake, bishop's counselor in in California. Buria) wilt be at late Thursday. Flood damage was extensive the Vineyard ward. the Forest Lawni cemetery s Friends may call at the place throughout western Oklahoma, where rains up to eight Inches of services Tuesday from 7 to 9 Ancient legends state that diaoccurred during a four-da- y period p.m. and Wednesday prior tp serv monds were to !be found in the ending Friday No official esti- ices. Burial will be in the Orem brains of serpents; according to mate of the cost had been made. cemetery. the Encyclopedia Britannica. Jensine Marie Mortensen, 88, died Friday at! the home of her daughter, Mrs. Marie Lee, in Provo of causes incident to age. g. Mrs. Mortensen was born in Denmark,! May 4,. 1883. the daughter of Peder Christian Niel sen and Caroline Christine Olesen. She was mar ried to Morten . El-lin- ien nt - r ., 80-Year-- Kanab Man Held On Embezzlement i Man Old mm Found Dead settling Vineyard . was-bor- th ; ih Youth Hit .no' a - life-lon- . Native of Provo California Dies I Head by Shotput (U.R) CITY, May Ah mishap in South Salt Lake oh U.S. 91 early Saturday claimed the life of 59- Martin J. Miller of Salt year-ol- d Lake City. "Officers said he was struck down by a car driven-4jKarl M. Newton of Salt Lake City. The death was the 75th to date for the state this year, compared with 56 to a similar date last year. auto-pedestri- an ''!,. y Second Division Halts Reds Gail Homfe Linnette Liddiard, at the family home, 138 N. 9th E. She was born Nov. 27, 1950 in Provo. Surviving besides her parents are two brothers, Lloyd Raymond Jr. and Gary Lee Liddiard; four grandparents,' Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Liddiard, Provo. and Mr. and Mrs. A-- . Browne, Sidney; Australia; and two Mr. and Mrs. Bryant M. Jolley, Provo f Funeral services will be- Mon day at 10:30 a.m. in the St. Francis Catholic church with Father Seraphin Mullev in .charge. Friends may Call at the Berg mortuary Monday prior to services. Buriaf will be in the Provo city .cemetery. great-grandpare- - -- I j . : te - divi-jsion- de-fen- ses j j Inje-Hongch- daughter of Lloyd Raymond and Dawn Browne Liddiard, died at 2:30 p.m. Saturday j from Page One) the (Continued DETROIT, May 19 (U.R) nation's" fifth largest city faced fallen 'short in their' suicidal at to destroy the 2nd division up to its fifth week without buses tempt or streetcars Saturday with a and in their drive against vital Hongchon, bastion of the central clear eye and steady thumb. . When 3.500 transit ODerators mountain corridor. went on strike in a demand for The Chinese attack, spearheadhigher pay last April 21, there ing he second round of were dire predictions of auto' and Communist spring offensive, had s, defense plant shutdowns and mass jrouted two. South Korean the Allied up openeo' unemployment. But it didn't work in their sector;, and carried out that way. borne 20 miles-intThe strike it causing 2,000,000 east of Chunchon. South Korea : i riA4i.iS..a But then, at l:30p.m Saturday, no but serious ence, damage. Fac after three final ferocious charges, tories, stores and schools are jthe assault faltered and died operating normally, or nearly so. down. At the 2nd divinightfall Folks are! driving to work, sharnew positions athoccupied sion ing the rid with fellow employes wart the highway on pickup and de southeast and southwesf of Hang-to- e, livery schedules. Those who donjt 9 H. miles northeast of Hong' 'i belong to car pools are hitch- -. chon. v hiking in wholesale lots. Since Thursday lhe tough division and its attached Dutch and French units . had fought the enemy on three sides-so- uth, east and north. Its fight Southward was hot rightly a withGo drawal. It always had safety to the west. U p 25 At variousr times three battalions and. at least two companies WASHINGTON. May 19 fU.Ri Were cut off.. But they fought Parcel post rates will go up-2- 5 per their way, hand to hand, back to cent on Oct Postmaster General Jesse M. he division perimeter, and there Donaldson Received clearance hey turned and fought again. ' t Revenre Motive Seen from the Interstate Commerce Commission late yesterday to put I Prisoners reported that a prim-r- y the boost into effect. Although objective of the assault was congress usually decides postal he destruction of thet2nd divi-im- v in revenge for the licking rates, an old, law says the ICC may pave the way for increases by giv it gave the Reds last, February at Chipyong and Wonju on ' this ing its consent; Ult Infant Dies At 0 Family Charge at Nephi - Detroit Faces Up Its! 5th Week Killed OnHighway To Without busses 19 SALT LAKE S.L. Pedestrian split-seco- on nd s Parcel Post Rates to Per Gent . Board Approves Four Railroad Wage Hike Cases IT UTWl IV tST A 1711. seven'-cenfs-an-h- non-operat- ' non-operat- ing nt same mountain front where M, how is fighting. , It was a day of weird develop ments on the Korean battlefront One of the strangest was at the gates of Seoul, oil the western front. There four battalions of North Koreans attacked the Allied, defenses by daylight. When the fighting was over and hundreds of Reds had been killed or wounded; dazed prisoners related that their commanders had told them the Allies had aban doned the, South. Korean capital, . . . J .I a screening force to take the , city. ... a ' r?'SsTTnrxt are "i 4: f- - Just liko Commcncpmcnt ' TAILJJi Sv i! F3S A cue DJovotr . Deqrhs hs -- at ( " 1 NATE MORGAN'S ft' ...... ."l "iw foranymawho shaves h nT SJ ' AM DttCCTOI La TTTcii Hn 1 MISS AMERICA if Uwh - HEW HEADS TY " SCHICK'S RfAL 'it ROTARY MOTOR f FASTER-CLOS- ER- Auto . j EASIER SHAVES Y A tUUA 3 ftONa I .i-i 27 s rrm nisi RICH NEW 1 f 1 CADDIE CASE : L3 to ONLY ' W- ft - ri ; i Sijl AUfttMT an mm ACDIMT I'; Jnnh ImtM 67 SI tlKSHItl I Jnnh 57" $4950 suDunr awste --c 7H 1 - YOURS ID ix mM A YEAR TO PAY :4 if 111 r . --Ji- K II U m 1. i.i r, 1 I 1,1 r i "i I 1 fc i our ing , a) III FL IH V 1V1 The wage stabilization board Saturday announced Approval of four railroad cases granting work ers a 40 hour week with no re' duction in pay. , In three of the cases,1 the workers were also given a wage boost, j The board said the fullng was made on an order by Economic Stabilizer Eric Johnston on April 24, which granted a wage increase for 1,000,000 railroad employes. The ofrder said such payments could be extended where it was "established custom and pactice" to do so. In three of the cases, the board said, contracts were patterned after an agreement granted IS railroad fmioni In 1948. They. called for a 40 hour week with no pay reduction, and a seven-ceincrease effective May 1, 1951. i i i i m m i 4 ivo r- - i |